This is pertaining to Ecommerce Sites that have multiple sites for various countries.

Like ASOS has one site each for US, Australia, Germany etc on different domain/sub-domains.

All these sites have the same content but only the prices are different for the respective product.

Isn't it a Duplicate Content Issue?

Regards,Nuk

Stevie_D
—
2011-11-15T12:48:41Z —
#2

Google is generally smart enough to figure out that if you have, for example:website.com/us/product/45 and website.com/uk/product/45orwebsite.com/product/45 and website.co.uk/product/45that those are regional variations of the same page, to be given as appropriate to surfers depending on where they are. As long as you are consistent throughout the site, and ideally have some measure in place to direct visitors to the appropriate section of the site, eg based on their IP address, you shouldn't have any problem with Google considering the two pages as duplicate content.

Google is generally smart enough to figure out that if you have, for example:website.com/us/product/45 and website.com/uk/product/45orwebsite.com/product/45 and website.co.uk/product/45that those are regional variations of the same page, to be given as appropriate to surfers depending on where they are. As long as you are consistent throughout the site, and ideally have some measure in place to direct visitors to the appropriate section of the site, eg based on their IP address, you shouldn't have any problem with Google considering the two pages as duplicate content.

Mittineague
—
2014-09-30T00:12:33Z —
#4

This topic is now archived. It is frozen and cannot be changed in any way.